Research paper topics, free example research papers

Alcohol: A Fatal Attraction - 1,621 words
Alcohol: A Fatal Attraction According to Lang nine
out of ten high school seniors have used alcohol,
one out of twenty use it daily, and one out of
three will get drunk during any given weekend
(back cover). Teenage drinking is a very serious
problem that is growing by the day in our country.
I want to know what kids who drink are getting
themselves in to when they decide to start in high
school or junior high. What types of health and
psychological problems will they be facing? What
are the chances that they will become addicted to
alcohol, or to some other drug, for life? My
father is an alcoholic and has been so for most,
if not all, of his life. He began drinking at
about the age of twel ...
Related: attraction, fatal, nervous system, family history, vogler

Fatal Errors Of Brutus - 614 words
Fatal Errors Of Brutus The Fatal Errors of Brutus
William Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Julius Caesar
is built upon the six lethal mistakes that Brutus
unknowingly performs. Brutus believes he uses wise
judgment and cunning skill in his plans to prevail
over Caesar. There are three errors that seem to
be the most significant. They are refusing to take
an oath, not killing Antony and allowing Antony to
speak at Caesar's funeral. The plot against Caesar
is first devised by Cassius, who slowly allows
Brutus to take over the arrangements. This is when
Brutus' miscalculations eventually lead him to his
own downfall. First, Brutus truthfully feels that
the conspirators have enough will and intellig ...
Related: brutus, fatal, last battle, visual aids, sarcasm

Fatal Voyage - 701 words
FATAL VOYAGE The Sinking of the USS Indianapolis
by Dan Kurzman 8 September 2000 The United States
Navy's core values are based on Honor, Courage,
and Commitment. These three basic principles have
laid the foundation for the continued success of
the Navy and has enabled us to meet and conquer
every new challenge. Honor - true faith and
allegiance; conducting ourselves in the highest
ethical manner in all relationships with peers,
superiors, and subordinates. Abide by an
uncompromising code of integrity, taking
responsibility for our actions and keeping our
word. Courage - support and defend; make decisions
in the best interest of the Navy and the nation,
without regard to personal consequenc ...
Related: fatal, voyage, commanding officer, moral character, command

Macbeth Fatal Flaws - 759 words
Macbeth - Fatal Flaws Anyone who is not a god, is
not perfect. Everyone has a weakness or a flaw.
Some flaws are more deadly than others. Some are
addicted to heroin while others are unable to
remember where they put their keys. Every major
flaw in this story though, comes back to haunt
them. The reason why anybody fails in this story
is because of their flaw. Not everyone dies
though, that is because their flaw is not fatal.
Following will be an explanation of how the major
flaws of the characters lead to their downfall.
Macbeth will be the first one discussed, since he
was the main character. The plays problems start
when he kills Duncan. This is done because he has
a flaw; he is too deter ...
Related: fatal, lady macbeth, macbeth, main character, the prince

Medeas Fatal Flaw - 605 words
Medea's Fatal Flaw The Curse of a Fatal Flaw Every
highly tragic and dramatic figure has a fatal flaw
that leads to his or her downfall. The character
of Medea fits into this category perfectly.
Excessive passion is what leads Medea to her
destruction. Her love for Jason, her selfishness,
and her rage are all factors of Medea's harmartia.
First, the strongest factor contributing to
Medea's fatal flaw is her love for Jason. During
Jason's quest of searching for the Golden Fleece
and meets the Princess of Colchis, Medea falls
madly in love with Jason and runs off to lolcos
with him. Medea and Jason get married and have two
children. Medea's excessive love for Jason started
showing when she kil ...
Related: fatal, flaw, golden fleece, excessive, uncle

Sexually Transmitted Diseases - 875 words
A major question facing many teenagers is whether
or not to have sex. A result of having sex is
contracting sexually transmitted diseases.
Sexually transmitted diseases, or venereal
diseases affect 10 to 12 million Americans each
year. (Daugirdas 75) In the United States,
sexually transmitted diseases strike an average of
one person every 1.5 seconds. (76) About half of
STD patients are under the age of twenty-five.
(Landers 45) Nearly 2.5 million teenagers are
infected with these deadly diseases. (Welsh A-5) A
few types of sexually transmitted diseases are
gonorrhea, herpes, chlamydia, syphilis, etc. These
diseases can be fatal if not attended to. In
addition to those epidemic diseases alre ...
Related: sexually, sexually transmitted disease, sexually transmitted infections, transmitted, transmitted diseases

Knowledge, Ability, And Skill - 1,682 words
1. Demonstrates the necessary knowledge, ability,
and skill for assessing the physical, emotional,
and mental capabilities of concerned persons to
carry out an intervention. 2. Demonstrates
commitment to ABCI principle that the primary goal
of intervention is to secure immediate help for
the chemically dependent person first and
foremost. 3. Demonstrates commitment to ABCIs
principle that pre-intervention counseling
sessions for concerned persons are short term an
time limited and should not be prolonged to the
extent that immediate help for the chemically
dependent person is postponed. 4. Ensures that
during the intervention statements by concerned
person to the chemically dependent person ...
Related: skill, family member, drug dependence, criminal justice, spouse

Everyone Has The Right To Work, To Free Choice Of - 1,033 words
... est problems facing sweatshop workers is the
conditions under which they must work. Sweatshops
vary in their conditions. One thing is certain
though, on a scale the best conditions start at
bad and the worst are judged as terrible. There is
no bright spot to the scale. But according to the
definition, (a workplace where workers are
exploited in their wages or benefits and are
subject to poor working conditions), the
conditions are, by most accounts, hazardous and
unsanitary. Typical conditions include sweltering
heat and crowded working environments. In
addition, in some cases there are not many fire
escapes, water fountains, restrooms and other
which are necessary to building codes. To ...
Related: free choice, corporate america, last year, college students, spoken

A Farewell To Arms - 1,083 words
A Farewell To Arms That fall, Henry and Catherine
live in a brown wooden house on the side of a
mountain. They enjoy the company of Mr. and Mrs.
Guttingen, who live downstairs, and they remain
very happy together; sometimes they walk down the
mountain path in Montreux. One day Catherine gets
her hair done in Montreux, and afterwards they go
to have a beer--Catherine thinks beer is good for
the baby, because it will keep it small; she is
worried about the baby's size because the doctor
has said she has a narrow pelvis. They talk again
about getting married, but Catherine wants to wait
until after the baby is born when she will be thin
again. Three days before Christmas, the snow
comes. Cather ...
Related: a farewell to arms, farewell, farewell to arms, second half, frederic henry

A Holy Nation - 1,915 words
A Holy Nation A Holy Nation After creating the
world, a paradise for human kind, God is forced to
banish Adam and Eve because they disobey His
orders to not eat fruit from the tree of wisdom.
This results ultimately in the fall of man to
earth. Immediately from the beginning of his time
on Earth, man chooses not to follow the path set
before him by God but instead spreads evil
throughout the world. Therefore, the inherent
problem humans face is the pressure to judge
between good and evil, the need to aspire to be
like God. God's first solution to this problem was
to flood the world killing everyone, but those on
Noah's arch. God realizes, however, that this is
not an answer to the problem th ...
Related: holy, men and women, growing old, good and evil, pivotal

A Introduction - 1,026 words
A. Introduction During the last twenty years,
industrial livestock farms have been replacing the
traditional family size farms that once raised
most of the nations swine. The number of livestock
animals produced in the United States has grown
modestly in the past two decades, but the number
of farms raising them has slunk dramatically
because large producer now dominate the market.
The large increase in industry farming has led to
large quantities of manure. B. Problem Definition
The over abundance of manure has become a problem
that leads to problem with Pollution, heated
debates between the industries and societies
(people of the community), ways to try and find
solutions for the pollution ...
Related: dissolved oxygen, problem definition, real estate, solid, dairy

A Jury Of Her Peers: A Character Analysis - 1,562 words
A Jury Of Her Peers: A Character Analysis James
McMasters English 112 October 17, 2000 A JURY OF
HER PEERS - A CHARACTER ANALYSIS BY SUSAN GLASPELL
As in the case of most, if not all, good
allegorical stories, the primary impact of the
tale is strongly influenced by the authors
detailed characterization of the setting, as well
as the characters feelings and passions. Certainly
such is the case in Susan Glaspells story A Jury
of Her Peers. Here we see a richness of
characterization and setting that is elusive at
first reading, but becomes clearer as the story
evolves. In the final analysis, it becomes clear
just who the jury is and the outcome of their
collective verdict. It is by the use of ...
Related: character analysis, jury, jury of her peers, human condition, breaking point

A Look Into Alzheimers Disease - 634 words
A look into Alzheimer's Disease The reason that I
chose Alzheimer's Disease as the disease that I
will report on is because I felt that it is very
interesting and common within people over the age
of sixty. I believed that I if I need a great deal
about this disease, I would understand more about
why so many people have become devastated by it. A
good friend of my Grandfather's also had the
disease but he has passed away. I do know however,
that as soon as it was understood that he had the
disease, he had to begin to change the way his
life worked significantly. For one, he really
couldn't go outside alone and he couldn't do much
without his wife by his side. He had to stay home
most of the ...
Related: alzheimer's disease, alzheimers disease, nursing home, best care, significantly

A Separate Peace - 414 words
A Separate Peace A Separate Peace by John Knowles
is a complex novel that portrays war in many
different forms. Gene Forrester was attending
Devon School during World War II. This was a
representation of different wars he was having
within himself. Gene was feeling a kind of
jealousy toward his friend Finny. He also felt
like Finny was trying to sabotage him with
relation to his schoolwork. Lastly Gene felt
guilt, guilt from what was described by him as a
"blind impulse" and also from having the truth
revealed to him resulting in a fatal accident.
Gene fought with his fears throughout the story.
He thought that he was a complete person, full of
what a man should be, but when he got to Devon ...
Related: separate peace, john knowles, book reports, different forms, remorse

Abe Lincoln - 1,112 words
... him from the chores Lincoln attended ABC
school.10 This is where Lincoln learned to become
a hard worker. Lincolns working days started in
1831. Abe and his brother were hired to build a
boat and float it down the Mississippi with a load
of cargo on it. The boat was headed towards New
Orleans and this is where Lincoln saw his first,
but not last, slave auction. Lincoln is quoted in
saying, if I ever got a chance to hit that thing,
I would hit it hard. 11 Lincoln was not in favor
of slavery but he was certainly to abolitionist.
Lincolns career in politics began in the spring of
1832, when Lincoln was 23, he ran for a seat on
the Illinois House of Representatives. In his
campaign, Lincoln ...
Related: abe lincoln, lincoln, interest rate, republican party, auction

Abortion - 714 words
Abortion annon Abortion on demand should be legal
for many reasons. In countries where abortion is
absolutely not tolerated it is a fact that women
continue to receive abortions, from unqualified
back-street abortionists or the village massage
abortionist. Both of these individuals risk
putting the woman through painful and potentially
fatal tortures just in an attempt to abort a
child. Each year 84 000 women die worldwide from
failed abortion attempts. Because of anti-abortion
legislation women avoid going to the hospital,
often until it is too late, to avoid prosecution
from police. In the cases of rape and incest the
very idea of being forced to have the child of the
woman's abuser is rep ...
Related: abortion, medical profession, catholic church, religious women, cessation

Abortion - 1,868 words
Abortion "You wake up in the morning and find
yourself back to back in bed with an unconscious
violinist. A famous unconscious violinist. He has
been found to have a fatal kidney ailment, and the
Society of Music Lovers have canvassed all the
available medical records and found that you alone
have the right blood type to help. They have
therefore kidnapped you, and last night the
violinist's circulatory system was plugged into
yours, so that your kidneys can be used to extract
poisons from his blood as well as your own. The
director of the hospital now tells you, 'Look,
we're sorry the Society of Music Lovers did this
to you-we would never have permitted it if we had
known. But still, they d ...
Related: abortion, healthy people, cesarean section, natural environment, suppose

Abstract On Rose Diseases - 2,112 words
... by 1970, most of the garden roses in the
United States were infected. Since then, heat
therapy programs have been initiated at the Oregon
State University and the University of California
at Davis, as well as by Bear Creek (parent company
of Jackson & Perkins Roses and Armstrong Roses).
The Oregon State program is now nearly defunct.
Some commercial rose nurseries have made use of
those programs and now offer virus-free plants for
sale. However, many nurseries have not made any
attempt to provide healthy plants, and a large
percentage of the roses grown and sold in Florida
are infected. Florida nurseries using Fortuniana
as a rootstock are at a particular disadvantage,
since scion-source ...
Related: abstract, washington state university, state university, washington state, sending

Accidents - 1,731 words
Accidents Aircraft Investigation Each mishap has
their own characteristics and there is no
substitute for good old-fashioned common sense and
initiative. Each wrecked aircraft has its own
story to tell if properly investigated. However
Air Force guidelines are quick to point out that
investigators in their eagerness seek out the
causes, often ignore safe investigation practices
and common safety precautions. Air Force
Investigators are maybe in even more difficult
position due to the hazards that are unique to the
military war fighting machines, Ill discuss a few
of these hazards briefly before I get into the
steps of Air Force accident investigations.
Munitions Extreme care must be given to ...
Related: human body, early stages, government agencies, acquire, questioning